RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
3,633 are the core, quality-scored corpus (34 lettered sections — see How We Work); the remaining 88 are cross-corpus synthesis documents (68 InterDocs, 12 Connections, 8 Theories) also indexed here.
2,448 results for "Ur dragon" — page 73 of 123
ZB_4_02 — Extremophiles and Extreme Biology
Extremophiles are organisms that thrive in conditions lethal to most life — extreme heat, cold, acidity, radiation, pressure, salinity, or desiccation. Their discovery has fundamentally expanded understanding of life's b
ZB_4_13 — Historical Ecology: Human-Ecosystem Co-Evolution through Time
Historical ecology investigates how human land use, management, domestication, exploitation, and settlement over centuries to millennia have shaped contemporary ecosystems, landscapes, and biodiversity patterns — reveali
ZB_3_22 — Old-Growth Forests & Ancient Woodland Ecology
Old-growth forests — variously defined as primary forests that have developed over centuries without major anthropogenic disturbance — represent the most structurally complex and biologically diverse terrestrial ecosyste
ZB_3_14 — Kelp Forests and Seagrass Meadows: Underwater Gardens of Productivity
Kelp forests and seagrass meadows are the two major groups of marine macrophyte-dominated ecosystems — structurally complex, highly productive underwater habitats that provide essential services including nursery habitat
ZB_3_20 — Kelp Forest Ecology
Kelp forests are underwater ecosystems formed by dense stands of large brown macroalgae (Order Laminariales), predominantly species of Macrocystis (giant kelp, reaching heights of 45–60 meters — among the fastest-growing
ZB_3_04 — Ecological Succession
Ecological succession — the process of community change over time following a disturbance or the creation of new habitat — is one of ecology's oldest and most studied concepts. Primary succession occurs on newly exposed
ZB_3_13 — Estuary and Mangrove Ecology: Where Rivers Meet the Sea
Estuaries — semi-enclosed coastal water bodies where freshwater river discharge meets and mixes with saline ocean water — and mangrove forests — tropical and subtropical intertidal forests dominated by salt-tolerant tree
ZC_3_11 — Warfare and Conflict — Anthropological Perspectives
The anthropology of warfare and conflict addresses one of the most consequential and contested questions in the human sciences: is organized violence a universal feature of human societies, an evolutionary inheritance, o
ZC_3_06 — Sociology of Law
Sociology of law examines law not as an autonomous system of rules but as a social institution — shaped by power, culture, and economic relations, and in turn shaping social life. Émile Durkheim (The Division of Labour i
ZC_3_16 — The Gig Economy: Labor, Platforms, and Precarity
The gig economy — defined as a labor market characterized by short-term, task-based, platform-mediated work rather than permanent employment — has grown from a marginal phenomenon to a significant sector of advanced econ
ZC_3_08 — Aging and Gerontology
Social gerontology is the study of aging as a social process — examining how societies construct old age, how aging populations transform social institutions, and how older adults experience later life. Global demographi
ZC_3_07 — Disability Studies
Disability studies is an interdisciplinary field examining disability as a social, cultural, and political phenomenon rather than a purely medical one. The foundational distinction is between the medical model (disabilit
ZC_3_02 — Sociology of Science and Knowledge
Sociology of knowledge examines how social conditions shape what counts as knowledge. Karl Mannheim (Ideology and Utopia, 1929/1936) argued that thought is "existentially determined" — shaped by the thinker's social posi
ZC_3_13 — Human Rights: Universal Norms and Their Contested Foundations
Human rights — entitlements and protections considered inherent to all human beings regardless of nationality, ethnicity, sex, language, religion, or other status — constitute one of the most influential normative framew
ZC_5_12 — Peasant Studies: Agrarian Change, Moral Economy, and Resistance
Peasant studies is an interdisciplinary field studying the economic, social, political, and cultural life of rural agricultural communities — peasantries — and the processes of agrarian change, resistance, and transforma
ZC_5_04 — Social Movements: Collective Action, Mobilization, and Protest
Social movements are sustained, organized collective efforts by non-institutional actors to promote or resist social, political, economic, or cultural change through unconventional means — including protest, civil disobe
ZC_5_21 — Intergenerational Trauma: Epigenetic Inheritance and Collective Wounds
Intergenerational trauma (also transgenerational or historical trauma) refers to the transmission of traumatic effects from one generation to subsequent generations through psychological, behavioral, social, and — contro
ZC_5_02 — Sociology of Technology: Social Shaping, Actor-Networks, and Technological Determinism
The sociology of technology (a core subfield of Science and Technology Studies — STS) investigates how social, economic, political, and cultural factors shape the development, design, adoption, and consequences of techno
ZC_5_17 — Ritual Efficacy Mechanisms: How Ritual Produces Real-World Effects
Ritual — formalized, repetitive, symbolic action that is culturally prescribed and often marked as distinct from ordinary behavior — is a universal feature of human societies, found in religious ceremonies, civic commemo
ZC_5_16 — Computational Social Science: Big Data, Agent-Based Models, and Digital Behavioral Analysis
Computational social science (CSS) is the interdisciplinary field that applies computational methods — machine learning, natural language processing, network analysis, agent-based modeling, and large-scale data mining —
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